воскресенье, 17 сентября 2017 г.

Bring or Take

Bring vs. Take       Some words have certain similarities in meaning and use, and this, oftentimes, causes confusion among us. This is the case with the terms  bring and take. These two refer to moving something or someone from one place to another. But the goal of this post is to help you differentiate the two so you can use them properly.
The word bring is used as a verb which means “to come to a place with someone or something” or “to cause someone or something to come to a place.”
7 things that will definitely happen if Jose Mourinho really does bring Mesut Ozil to Manchester United   (Mirror)
ZenBook maker Asus launches $50M venture fund to bring Silicon Valley startups into Asia   (TechCrunch)
MP Layla Moran to bring community hospital cut concerns to health minister
(Oxford Mail)
On the other hand, the term take is commonly used as a verb meaning “to lay hold of something with one’s hands.”
“Take your glass out of the freezer and position the banana shapes inside…”
(Popsugar UK)
“… skiing is a sport for lazy because you take the chair, lift up, and just let gravity get you down…”   (CBC News)
“You take the pen. You write your own order. Somehow it still transforms to something else…”   (Toledo Blade)
However, what causes the confusion is its other meaning “to lead, carry, or cause to go along to another place.”
Take me out to Alt-Right Night at Dodger Stadium   (Los Angeles Times)
Here to save the world and take down Trump – it’s Miss America   (The Guardian)
Social Capital to take startups public without an IPO   (TechCrunch)
Troopers arrest hundreds and take dozens of guns off New Orleans streets in two month operation   (WGNO)

To put it simply, the main difference between bring and take is that you use bring when asking people to bring things or other people to the place where you are while you use take when you move things or people to the place where you are heading.